Progressive taxation is a terrible concept. If you are rich because governmental actions give you a special privilege you should pay it all back - in other words the special deal should be removed.
If you are rich because you produce things - or provide services - that people want, you shouldn't pay anything. There is an economic argument that if taxation reduces the income of someone who is needed in the system, then taxing him, thereby reducing his take, will make his occupation less attractive to new prospects, thus producing a shortage. To induce more people to undergo the training and devote the time needed to join this occupation, wages will rise, perhaps to a point where after tax income will be at the required level to keep the occupation manned (or womanned)! In other words, the tax payment is avoided by the intended target. So, who pays the tax? Well, the customer always pays. This result can be noted when it is suggested that instead of taxing the common people, taxes on business will be increased. (They are trying to do this in Los Angeles now.) So, business pays the tax and promptly passes it on to their customers. So the idiots who support a "business tax" pay it themselves. Harry \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ On Sun, Apr 8, 2012 at 2:12 AM, michael gurstein <[email protected]> wrote: > > -----Original Message----- > From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of > Sid Shniad > Sent: Friday, April 06, 2012 4:18 PM > Subject: Progressive taxation -- what a concept! > > * > http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/politics/article/1149981--walkom-these-high-income-docs-want-the-rich-to-pay > > Toronto > Star > March 21, 2012 > > These high-income docs want the rich to pay > > Thomas Walkom* > > Here’s a novel idea. A new organization of well-paid doctors thinks that > they — and other high-income earners — should pay more in taxes. > > “Who knows?†physician Michael Rachlis, one of the founders of Doctors > for Fair Taxation, told me Wednesday. “Maybe we’ll start a trend. Maybe > we’ll see a Lawyers for Fair Taxation start up.†> > I’m not going to hold my breath. Still, it’s refreshing to see someone > stand up for a more progressive tax system. > > The conventional wisdom these days is that progressivity in taxation — > the notion that people should pay proportionally more as their incomes rise > — is counterproductive. > > Most governments don’t have the nerve to scrap progressive taxation > entirely. So they’ve been doing it gradually by reducing the number of > income-tax brackets and by raising more money through user fees and > consumption levies like the HST. > > They’ve have been aided and abetted in this by mainstream economists who > argue, usually without any proof, that taxes on income discourage people > from working. > > The upshot of this, as a recent study from the Canadian Centre for Policy > Alternatives demonstrates, is that the poor in Canada now pay a greater > share of their income to government in the form of taxes than do the ultra > rich. > > Which is the antithesis of the bargain made when governments first began > to levy income taxes almost 100 years ago. > > Doctors for Fair Taxation argues that a more progressive tax system would > be good for human health. > > First there’s the obvious point. Governments almost invariably deal with > their fiscal problems by cutting back spending on health care. Both Prime > Minister Stephen Harper’s federal Conservatives and Ontario Premier > Dalton McGuinty’s Liberals are heading down this path. > > The second point, well-known since the 1970s, is that poverty breeds poor > health. The uber-rich may not like sharing their money with the very poor. > But doing so increases the overall health of Canadian society and, in the > end, is both cheaper and more efficient than allowing an underclass to > fester. > > The third point, demonstrated by history, is that society as a whole does > better when there are fewer income extremes. Such stolidly middle-class > societies tend to be more stable, less violent and more productive. > > The suggestions by Doctors for Fair Taxation are modest. The group > recommends that the federal and provincial governments create four new tax > brackets for those earning more than $100,000. Someone with a taxable > income of $170,000 would pay an extra $1,400. But someone earning $7 > million would pay an extra $787,400. > > Rachlis figures the scheme would net Ottawa an extra $3.5 billion a year > and Ontario an additional $1.7 billion. > > That’s not enough to wipe out the deficit for either level of > government. But it would go partway along the path. > > More to the point, it would preclude the need for drastic spending cuts. > > Up to now, the anti-tax movement has held centre stage. Even leftish > politicians are reluctant to talk of taxing the wealthy. In Ontario, New > Democratic Party Leader Andrea Horwath focuses instead on taxing anonymous > corporations, in the hope that this won’t spook voters. > > Yet, there’s nothing wrong with having the well-to-do pay more. It’s > fair. It works. We’ve done it successfully. > > So kudos to this new pro-tax bunch. Usually, when people talk of taxing > the rich, they exclude themselves. This group may be quixotic. But at least > it doesn’t employ that dodge. > > The average gross income for Ontario physicians is about $325,000. Doctors > for Fair Taxation reckon people making that kind of money can pay a little > more. They’re right. > > Thomas Walkom’s column appears Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday. > > > _______________________________________________ > Futurework mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework >
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